if you come to terms with the Romans; if not, I shall
be your enemy.” Mithridates admired the
answer, and did him no harm. Now, Lucullus was
afraid to keep the plain country, as the enemy were
masters of it with their cavalry, and he was unwilling
to advance into the hilly region, which was of great
extent and wooded and difficult of access; but it
happened that some Greeks were taken prisoners, who
had fled into a cave, and the eldest of them, Artemidorus,
promised Lucullus to be his guide, and to put him in
a position which would be secure for his army, and
also contained a fort that commanded Kabeira.
Lucullus, trusting the man, set out at nightfall after
lighting numerous fires, and getting through the defiles
in safety; he gained possession of the position; and,
when the day dawned, he was seen above the enemy,
posting his soldiers in a place which gave him the
opportunity of making an attack if he chose to fight,
and secured him against any assault if he chose to
remain quiet. At present neither general had
any intention of hazarding a battle; but it is said,
that while some of the king’s men were pursuing
a deer, the Romans met them and attempted to cut off
their retreat, and this led to a skirmish, in which
fresh men kept continually coming up on both sides.
At last the king’s men had the better, and the
Romans, who from the ramparts saw their comrades falling,
were in a rage, and crowded about Lucullus, praying
him to lead them on, and calling for the signal for
battle. But Lucullus, wishing them to learn the
value of the presence and sight of a prudent general
in a struggle with an enemy and in the midst of danger,
told them to keep quiet; and, going down into the
plain and meeting the first of the fugitives, he ordered
them to stand, and to turn round and face the enemy
with him. The men obeyed, and the rest also facing
about and forming in order of battle, easily put the
enemy to flight, and pursued them to their camp.
Lucullus, after retiring to his position, imposed
on the fugitives the usual mark of disgrace, by ordering
them to dig a trench of twelve feet in their loose
jackets, while the rest of the soldiers were standing
by and looking on.
XVI. Now there was in the army of Mithridates
a prince of the Dandarii,[371] named Olthakus (the
Dandarii are one of the tribes of barbarians that
live about the Maeotis), a man distinguished in all
military matters where strength and daring are required,
and also in ability equal to the best, and moreover
a man who knew how to ingratiate himself with persons,
and of insinuating address. Olthakus, who was
always engaged in a kind of rivalry for distinction
with one of the princes of the kindred tribes, and
was jealous of him, undertook a great exploit for
Mithridates, which was to kill Lucullus. The
king approved of his design, and purposely showed him
some indignities, at which, pretending to be in a
rage, Olthakus rode off to Lucullus, who gladly received
him, for there was a great report of him in the Roman